Word: unfair
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Robert H. Everitt, organizer for Building Service local 30, said yesterday that once and for all he would attempt to break the power of the Harvard Employees Representative Association by eliminating the "unfair labor practice" of the rival union...
...integrity and personal success. One report says his house violated the Martin Act, which regulates the sale of stocks and bonds; another, that the charges to be preferred against him involve his connection with a liquor concern, in which he held 12,000 shares. Obviously, it is unfair to judge his business or himself until he has had a chance to speak at the March 17 hearing. But what happens to Mr. Whitney and his firm will not be remembered so much as what their failure proves. First to be noticed is the relative steadiness of the market, since under...
...entries. And it is precisely here that the associate members, as individuals, would make up an integral part of the house unit. To advertise the House plan about the country, and at the same time bar a fifth of the Sophomore Class from the Houses is a misrepresentation and unfair to those not accepted. To adopt some sort of associate plan seems almost a duty...
...thirty second annual report of the Carnegie Foundation sharply condemned the "unfair recruiting" of students by colleges, and stated that "many institutions of higher learning operate today in constant fear of losing tuition-paying students." The report revealed that almost all colleges claimed to have a "new education," a "new plan" and even a "new deal" for education. One high school in the middle west reported that over eighty-five public-relations officers, for as many colleges, had paid visits to the school, and endeavoured to persuade students to go to the college which they happened to represent...
...student will have to take. What is necessary is that each one realizes that a degree does not guarantee a job. Education never has been necessary to make money, but that in no way diminishes its value. To cut enrollments, even in law school, would not only be unfair to those who can and want to have such an education but would hurt the profession as well. Who can tell beforehand who will be a success and who not? Such things are never measured in school. William Hinton...